Erik von Nein wrote:Yeah, you'll notice he wasn't talking about marijuana strictly, or even necessarily at all.
Hrm. You're right. For some reason inbetween hitting "reply" and actually typing my post I jumbled the message. In any case, the basics of what I said apply to almost every single drug known to humans. Some examples:
- Methamphetamine, arguably one of the most dangerous chemicals to ever interact with humans, is already legal. It's Schedule II (some accepted medical use), which is interesting because marijuana (and all the hallucinogens) are Schedule I (no medical value)--methinks it's politics, not science. It's manufactured currently by Ovation Pharma under the trade name Desoxyn. And that's just in the US. There are at least a dozen labs in India, China, and across the world set up to produce large amounts of ephedrine and methamphetamine. Unless something has happened recently, the countries hosting them refuse to acquiesce to the US government's demands to shut them down.
- Heroin along with all the derivatives and synthetic opioids are produced synthetically by pretty much every Big Pharma company. Oxycontin comes to mind, as does Fentanyl, the opiate lollipop. Heroin itself is Schedule I, but a lot of the synthetics are Schedule II. In England, heroin is Schedule II, or so says wiki. And of course, all throughout the middle east and south america and china are opium farmers growing it in large amounts to supply the illegal trade-- IIRC there are even a few instances where opium is the only profitable thing for farmers to grow due to US trade policy and/or their own country's situation; if we legalized it but didn't let them start selling their crops legally, they'd have no way to support themselves.
- LSD was produced by Sandoz for a good while, and I guarantee they have all the equipment to start producing it again. The illegal supply sharply dropped around 2001 after the guys in the missile silo in kansas who apparently produced like 95% of the world's supply got caught, but it's still produced on a local scale by
someone. Damned if I have any idea who and how though.
- Ecstasy was also produced by Sandoz, and maybe others. It was used up until a few decades ago (I wanna say the 70s but don't quote me) as a psychotherapeutic catalyst. One of the textbooks behind me quotes some psychologist calling it "a year's worth of therapy in one six hour session". It's also produced illegally on a huge scale, and apparently isn't too terribly hard to make.
- "research chemicals", like 2C-B and 5-MeO-AMT, are produced on the smallest of scale by psychopharmacologists like Alexander Shulgin for study both inside and outside the US. It's tightly controlled though. They're mostly hallucinogens and they're all Schedule I or banned for being an "analog". Most of the chemicals are either hard or not very profitable to produce, apparently, because it's very rarely seen.
- Cocaine is Schedule II in the US, and I swear it's legally produced somewhere in the country but I can't find where. Wiki says its use wasn't completely prohibited until the Controlled Substance Act in the 70s.
To restate: Almost all drugs are or have been at one point mass-produced legally. All drugs are mass-produced illegally.
To move on: Given the addiction aspect of drugs, ie a near-constant increase in demand, drug production isn't a very risky venture at all, especially for an established drug producing company (alcohol, tobacco, pharmaceuticals). Aaand, I'm not arguing "dramatic immediate effects".
How many marijuana drug gangs are there, exactly? Most of the real heavy violence seems imported from South America/Mexico which deals largely in cocaine.
I don't think there are many marijuana-specific drug gangs, but any big drug gang deals in marijuana. I believe the violence relates to the desire to maximize profit tinged with the criminality of the situation much much more than any specific drug or the fact that it's drugs they're trafficking.